Yashwant Sinha\, Arun Shourie\, Prashant Bhushan move SC seeking FIR into Rafale deal

Yashwant Sinha, Arun Shourie, Prashant Bhushan move SC seeking FIR into Rafale deal

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

ministers and Shourie and activist on Wednesday moved the seeking registration of an FIR into the fighter jet deal between and alleging "criminal misconduct" by high public functionaries.

The complaint was filed on October 4 with the after their meeting with Alok Kumar Verma, who was late Tuesday night directed by the Centre to proceed on leave in the wake of feud with the second-in-command in the agency

The petition by the trio came two weeks after the apex court had on October 10 asked the Centre to provide details of the decision- making process in the deal with in a sealed cover by October 29.

It had clarified that it does not want information on pricing and technical particulars. The court's order had come on two PILs filed by advocates M L Sharma and Vineet Dhanda.

signed an agreement with for the purchase of 36 fighter in a fly-away condition as part of the upgrading process of the equipment. The Rafale fighter is a twin-engine Medium Multi Role Combat (MMRCA) manufactured by French company Dassault

had advanced a proposal to buy 126 fighter in August 2007 and floated a tender. Following this, an invitation was sent to various companies to participate in the bidding process.

The fresh plea by Sinha, Shourie and claimed that in 2007 tenders were issued by the for the purchase of 126 fighter aircraft and it was specified in the Request for Proposal that 18 of these aircraft would be purchased from abroad in a 'fly-away' condition and the remaining 108 would be manufactured in in the factory of (HAL) with transfer of technology from the foreign vendor.

The plea said that manufacturing the Rafale aircraft was declared the lowest tenderer and thereafter price negotiations began which were at a very advanced stage by March 25, 2015.

"However within 15 days of this, the of India and the of France announced a totally new deal jettisoning the virtually complete 126 aircraft deal and the on behalf of India agreed to purchase only 36 Rafale aircraft in a 'fly-away' condition without any transfer of technology and make in India.

"It later turned out that the new deal involved 50 per cent of the value of the contract to be given as 'offset contracts' to Indian companies and that the government informally told Dassault and the that the bulk of the offset contracts would have to be given to a company of which had just been set up," it claimed.

The plea alleged that new deal gives undue benefit to Limited (RAL) and the escalation of price of airplanes is to account for collateral considerations.

It stated that "public servants presiding over the government got the critical persons involved and to increase the contract price of the 36 Rafale aircraft from Rs 715 crore per aircraft as disclosed by then to Rs 1660 crore per aircraft. This resulted in a pecuniary advantage to both, Dassault and also Ambani's RAL. This amounts to Criminal Misconduct under section 13(1)(d)(iii) of the applicable Prevention of Corruption Act."

They said that when the final contract was signed after price negotiations, the price of the aircraft had been increased to more than double to what was under consideration in the old deal of 126 aircraft.

"It is clear therefore that the following acts were committed by various public servants which amount to offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act...

"However, it is clear that there is enormous pressure on the CBI because of the nature of the persons involved not to undertake this investigation. Till date not even an FIR has been registered in the matter and hence the petitioners are approaching the court for getting specially designated officers in the CBI to investigate this case and for this court to monitor the investigation," the plea said.

It said that the petitioners were aggrieved by the non-registration of FIR by the CBI on their 32-page complaint with 46 annexure detailed prima facie evidence of commission of cognisable offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act by public servants occupying the highest of public offices in the country.

"The highest ranking public officials, unilaterally, in violation of all mandatory procedures, without obtaining any Services Qualitative Requirement (SQR) from the Indian Air Force, or any decision of the or any Acceptance of Necessity from the Defence Acquisition Council, entered into a Memorandum of Understanding with the French regarding purchase of just 36 Rafale aircrafts, all in a 'fly away' condition with no Transfer of Technology and no Make in India," it alleged.

The plea has also sought direction to the Centre to cease and desist from influencing or intimidating in any way the officials that would investigate the offences mentioned in the complaint and not transfer the CBI officials tasked with investigation.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, October 24 2018. 20:30 IST